Lectures on the English Poets |
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Página 314
By art and artificial , as these terms are applied to poetry or human life , we mean those objects and feelings which depend for their subsistence and perfection on the will and arbitrary conventions of man and society ; and by nature ...
By art and artificial , as these terms are applied to poetry or human life , we mean those objects and feelings which depend for their subsistence and perfection on the will and arbitrary conventions of man and society ; and by nature ...
Página 324
Lord Byron unfairly enlists into the service of his argument those artificial objects which are direct imitations of nature , such as statuary , etc. This is an oversight . At this rate , all poetry would be artificial poetry .
Lord Byron unfairly enlists into the service of his argument those artificial objects which are direct imitations of nature , such as statuary , etc. This is an oversight . At this rate , all poetry would be artificial poetry .
Página 326
The Witches in Macbeth , the Furies in Eschylus , are so far artificial objects that they are creatures of the poet's brain ; but their impression on the mind depends on their possessing attributes which baffle and set at nought all ...
The Witches in Macbeth , the Furies in Eschylus , are so far artificial objects that they are creatures of the poet's brain ; but their impression on the mind depends on their possessing attributes which baffle and set at nought all ...
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Contenido
LECTURE | 1 |
ON CHAUCER AND SPENSER | 31 |
ON SHAKESPEARE AND MILTON | 67 |
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